During the Dark Ages and the Renaissance, Europe¿s monarchs often resorted to torture and executions. The pain inflicted by instruments of torture¿from the thumbscrew and the rack to the Inquisition¿s tools of torment¿was eclipsed only by horrific methods of execution, from breaking on the wheel and crucifixion to drawing and quartering and burning at the stake. The English ¿Bloody Code¿ made more than 200 crimes punishable by death, and judicial torture¿expressly authorized by law and used to extract confessions¿permeated continental European legal systems. Judges regularly imposed death sentences and other harsh corporal punishments, from the stocks and the pillory, to branding and ear cropping, to lashes at public whipping posts. In the Enlightenment, jurists and writers questioned the efficacy of torture and capital punishment. In 1764, the Italian philosopher Cesare Beccaria¿the father of the world¿s anti¿death penalty movement¿condemned both practices. And Montesquieu, like Beccaria and others, concluded that any punishment that goes beyond absolute necessity is tyrannical. Traditionally, torture and executions have been viewed in separate legal silos, with countries renouncing acts of torture while simultaneously using capital punishment. The UN Convention Against Torture strictly prohibits physical or psychological torture; not even war or threat of war can be invoked to justify it. But under the guise of ¿lawful sanctions,¿ some countries continue to carry out executions even though they bear the indicia of torture. In The Death Penalty as Torture, Prof. John Bessler argues that death sentences and executions are medieval relics. In a world in which ¿mock¿ or simulated executions, as well as a host of other non-lethal acts, are already considered to be torturous, he contends that death sentences and executions should be classified under the rubric of torture. Unlike in the Middle Ages, penitentiaries¿one of the products of the Enlightenment¿now exist throughout the globe to house violent offenders. With the rise of life without parole sentences, and with more than four of five nations no longer using executions, The Death Penalty as Torture calls for the recognition of a peremptory, international law norm against the death penalty¿s use.
Garza commissioned some of his workers to murder De La Fuente, but they were unable to do so because a small entourage that included Gilberto Matos, an associate of De La Fuente and drug smuggler who worked with Garza, ...
Five short novels about the death penalty: includes Last Day of a Condemned Man by Victor Hugo; Lois the Witch by Elizabeth Gaskell; The Dead Alive by Wilkie Collins; Billy Budd by Herman Melville and The Seven Who Were Hanged by Leonid ...
Presents an overview of the history of capital punishment, theories on the causes of crime and the deterrent effects of punitive actions, and the moral and legal principles involved.
5 The Electric Chair : Bob Sullivan I note that both the American Veterinary Medical Association and the Humane Society of the United States prohibit electrocution as a means to euthanize animals . —Georgia Supreme Court Justice Leah ...
PMID: 4668419 Haines, Herbert H. Against capital punishment: the anti-death penalty movement in America, 1972-1994 / Herbert H. Haines. Published/Created: New York: Oxford University Press, 1999. Projected Pub.
How can one man take such a dual role of friend and executioner, becoming both shepherd and butcher? Inspired by true events, this is the story that puts the death penalty on trial and changes history.
Or is it, in the words of the Furman majority more than thirty years ago, still applied in a manner so arbitrary as to be freakish? In his concurring opinion in Furman, Justice William Brennan pointed out the obvious: the United States ...
An Eye for an Eye?: The Morality of Punishing by Death
In addition, the report noted Boylan's respectable working-class background.24 More importantly, given the conventional approach to cases theretofore, Mr Justice O'Byrne recommended a reprieve. Describing Boylan as 'an irascible ...
103 Those men are: Ronald Gray, Dwight Loving, Todd Dock, Melvin Turner, James Murphy, Ronnie Curtis, Joseph Thomas, Curtis Gibb, Jose Simoy, Kenneth Parker, Wade Walker, William Kreutzer, Jesse Quintanilla, Andrew Witt, Hassan Akbar, ...